The Passing of the Idle Rich

audiobook

The Passing of the Idle Rich

by Frederick Townsend Martin

EN·~3 hours·12 chapters

Chapters

12 total
1

THE PASSING OF THE IDLE RICH

0:36
2

Chapter One

14:38
3

Chapter Two

29:36
4

Chapter Three

20:57
5

Chapter Four

15:53
6

Chapter Five

16:55
7

Chapter Six

14:49
8

Chapter Seven

11:31
9

Chapter Eight

38:31
10

Chapter Ten

17:22

Description

A keen-eyed insider, steeped in both American and European circles, launches a brisk examination of the nation’s social hierarchy. Drawing on his own experience as a banker, he argues that society is divided into three modes of labor—useful, useless, and idle—claiming the last two leech off the productive few. With a blend of historical anecdote and pointed observation, he paints the “idle rich” as a class whose extravagance and neglect of tradition undermine the democratic spirit.

The narrator’s conservative stance fuels a lively debate over progress versus precedent, questioning the rapid, reckless changes reshaping the country. He juxtaposes the disciplined banking customs of England and France with the more chaotic American approach, suggesting that inherited privilege has distorted the nation’s moral compass. Listeners will find a thought‑provoking portrait of early‑20th‑century America, rich with wit, critique, and a call for a return to disciplined, purposeful work.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (191K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Tim Lindell, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2020-08-21

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Frederick Townsend Martin

Frederick Townsend Martin

1849–1914

Born into great wealth but deeply uneasy with its comforts, this Gilded Age writer became known for speaking bluntly about poverty, privilege, and social duty. His books mix society memoir with a strong moral challenge to the idle rich.

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